Clio the cat, ? July 1997 - 1 May 2016
Background
The Netherlands have always looked to stay neutral in international conflict and were careful not to take a stand on the situation of Nazi Germany. To this day, they have always aimed to be neutral and not descend into war, unless provoked.
The ultimate goal of Nazi propaganda was to antagonise Jews and increase their suffering of consistent plight.
In early 1940, Belgium and the Netherlands posed as key territory for Germany to help bypass the French defence line and the Eastern border. This planned occupancy could have also stopped England from setting up a mainland European base.
Blitzkrieg
In one swell swoop, Germany planned on invading Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg to catch them off guard. The Germans used officers to dress up as tourists to map out the area and also received intel by German nationals residing in the area. Espionage at it’s peak.
In a slew of events: the Queen fled to England, the Germans failed to take the Hague, Rotterdam was bombed displacing 80,000 and killing 600 to 900 people.
The Netherlands was toppled. They were failed by their neutralist policy which did not allow them to take thorough defence strategies from France and England. The Dutch weapons were outdated and the small Dutch victories were undermined by the depth of German might.
Germany had now officially occupied Western Europe. The Jewish population was now under attack: living in fear and hostility. Some fled prior to the invasion while others chose to stay to live in fear or commit suicide months after.
Mokum. Yidish for ‘safe haven’. It is commonly referred to as a nickname for Amsterdam. One of five cities in Western Europe included and labelled along with the first letter of the Yidish alphabet due to heavy Jewish presence during the Holocaust.
In May 1940, anti Jewish decrees were enforced. Jewish civil servants were fired. Jewish businesses and residents themselves were to be registered.
According to Holocaust memorial museum in Jerusalem: by the Summer of 1943, most of the Jews living in Netherlands were deported.
A total of 107,000 jews had been deported to extermination camps. 75% of Dutch Jews were terminated during the Holocaust. An estimated 25,000 Jews went into hiding in the Netherlands. Two thirds of that survived. The others were betrayed and discovered.
Before the World War Two, 80,000 of the 14,000 Jews that lived in the Netherlands lived in Amsterdam. Most of them being Ajax fans. Amsterdam, considered to be the ‘Western Jerusalem’.
Enter Ajax
Het Houten Stadion. Known as the Wooden Stadium. It served as the first ever home venue for Ajax from 1907 to 1934. Their previous venue was a playing field where houses were to be built in 1907, sending the club on a hunt for a new location.
The second was the De Meer Stadion. The previous stadium was too small but this one could hold a capacity of 29,500.
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The stadium was located next to Amsterdam-Oost. A fiercely strong Jewish-populated neighbourhood located in the South-Western region of the Dutch capital.
A club a couple blocks away, WV-HEDW, were decimated during the Holocaust. 236 of their members were brutally murdered.
WV-HEDW were always the biggest Jewish football club in Amsterdam. They still play in Dutch league football to this day.
Opponents of Ajax would often see their supporters march down Nieuwmarkt/Waterloopleinbuurt which was a small corner next to the stadium. Known as de Jodenhoek, ‘Jews corner’.
Super Jews
Imagine bearing the flags that included the ‘Star of David’ and the Israeli flag while supporting Ajax. Often chanting ‘Joden Joden’ – ‘Jews Jews’ at games. Those that would were called the Super Jews.
A group of impassioned Jewish supporters of Ajax maybe retaliating against anti-semite chanting. Frustrated opposition supporters would often chant abusive and anti-semitic messages which intensified through the years at the De Meer Stadion.
Recent instances of such acts were captured in history from arch-rival Feyenoord fans. Caught using messages such as “Hamas, Hamas, Jews to the Gas”, “Let’s go Jew hunting”, “If you don’t jump, you’re a Jew”.
Jewish culture was a filling layer in the sandwich of Ajax fan culture. At one point, ringtones of a classic Hebrew folk song, ‘Hava Nagila’ could be downloaded from the official club website.
Irish-dutch filmmaker Nirit Peled made a documentary film on her experience as an Israeli immigrant in Amsterdam trying to find her identity juxtaposed with the views of the Super Jews. Nirit herself narrates the film in both Dutch and Hebrew.
The role of Ajax in Judaism and her personal struggles for identity are held closely under a microscope. td....
The last working-class hero in England.
Kira the cat, ? ? 2010 - 3 August 2018
Jasper the Ruffian cat ? ? ? - 4 November 2021
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